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  • Trends

    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer

    Neungsohwa, or trumpet vine, is emerging as a summer icon for young Koreans, who increasingly treat its blooming season as an experience to savor. Part of the trumpet creeper family, the plant produces clusters of large flowers in vivid shades of yellow and orange. It sends long, flexible stems up walls, fences and tree trunks, reaching heights of up to 10 meters. It typically blooms from July to September, peaking around August. Its blooms spill over theatrically, highlighting even small spaces and creating a sense of drama. The plant is hardy, tolerating heat, rain and wind, and has long been cultivated at homes and gardens around Korea. The flower’s recent popularity roots in its name and symbolism. The name of the flower can be translated as "insulting the sky." Essays have gone viral on social media playing with the idea of “laughing at” or “defying” the harsh summer sky, along with the season's monsoon rains, typhoons and oppressive heat. Old stories describe the flower as a sign of dignity and integrity even in decline, as its blossoms drop intact rather than scattering

    2 MIN READBy Lee Hae-rin
    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer
  • Travel & Food

    Korea’s temples reinvent summer vacation with surfing, scuba, meditation

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Korea’s temples reinvent summer vacation with surfing, scuba, meditation
  • Travel & Food

    Global influencers fan out across Korea to spotlight hidden culinary gems

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Global influencers fan out across Korea to spotlight hidden culinary gems
  • Korean Heritage

    Beyond K-pop: Korea wants handicrafts to be its next cultural export hit

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Beyond K-pop: Korea wants handicrafts to be its next cultural export hit
  • Lifestyle

    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor

    4 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor
  • Lifestyle

    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks

    3 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks
  • Arts & Theater

    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors
  • People & Events

    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Trends

Cancer slows down surgeon's dream to build eco-village on Jeju

Surgeon Hong Seung-jig poses in front of a tree native to Jeju Island, called the “dampatsu” in Korean (Elaeocarpos sylvestirs var. ellipticus), which he had planted three decades ago to commemorate his arrival on the island. Korea Times photo by Shim Hyun-chulHong Seung-jig's clinic on his scenic farmland welcomes patientsBy Kang Hyun-kyungJeju Island -- Lee Ok-soon and her husband on Monday visited a small clinic run by surgeon Hong Seung-jig seemingly in the middle of nowhere in Jeju's lush green western town of Aewol-eup. After fracturing her forefoot while gardening in the front yard of her home on the other side of the town, Lee said that she was worried about the possible impact of the injury on her health. The 68-year-old patient heaved a sigh of relief after hearing from Dr. Hong that the minor injury wouldn't develop into a serious health threat. “People of my age get nervous when they fracture something, even if it is a small, minor one, because we know very well about its potential to have a serious impact on our health,” she said. “So, befor

Oct 21, 2021By Kang Hyun-kyung
Cancer slows down surgeon's dream to build eco-village on Jeju
Travel & Food

IHG to open voco property in heart of Gangnam next year

By Jun Ji-hyeIHG Hotels & Resorts is planning to open voco Gangnam during the second quarter of next year. It is the second voco property that IHG has signed and plans to open in South Korea, following voco Pyeongtaek City in Gyeonggi Province. But the Gangnam property is scheduled to open earlier, becoming the first voco hotel to open its doors here.An image of voco Gangnam, which IHG Hotels & Resorts plans to open within the second quarter of next year / Courtesy of IHG Hotels & ResortsEquipped with 151 rooms, voco Gangnam will be located in the heart of Seoul's Gangnam District, one of the city's main tourist areas and an economic hub, renowned for its trendy restaurants, upscale and designer-brand shops and vibrant nightlife.Facilities at the hotel include an 85-seat cafe and bar, three meeting rooms totaling 600 square meters and a fitness center. “We're delighted to continue our growth in South Korea with the signing of voco Gangnam, which adds to the momentum we are building following our announcement of voco Pyeongtaek City in July,” said Serena Lim, I

Oct 21, 2021By Jun Ji-hye
IHG to open voco property in heart of Gangnam next year
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 21, 2021

Oct 20, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 21, 2021
Arts & Theater

LG Arts Center to relocate to Tadao Ando-designed complex in Seoul's Magok District

A rendering of the new LG Arts Center in Magok District, Seoul / Courtesy of LG Arts CenterBy Park Ji-wonThe LG Arts Center, one of the leading art theaters currently based in southern Seoul and run by LG Group's Yonam Foundation, will be relocated to a government-led industrial complex in Magok District, western Seoul, in March of next year. It will be open to the public in October of next year. Designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando and advised by Theatre Projects Consultants, a theater building consultant headquartered in the United Kingdom, the new art complex will be built on a 41,631-square-meter site and provide two concert halls, named the “Grand Theater” and “Black Box,” with 1,335 and 365 seats, respectively. The foundation has invested 250 billion won ($212.7 million) in the four-story complex, which has three levels below ground, since construction began in October 2017.“Even though the district has a potential to grow, it doesn't have enough cultural facilities … We hope the facility can become a cultural landmark there,” Shi

Oct 20, 2021By Park Ji-won
LG Arts Center to relocate to Tadao Ando-designed complex in Seoul's Magok District
Travel & Food

Korean Air to resume flights to Hawaii next month

In this Aug. 24 file photo, people sit on Waikiki Beach in Honolulu. Korean Air Lines, said Wednesday it will resume flights to Hawaii next month after suspending the route for 19 months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. AP-YonhapKorean Air Lines, South Korea's biggest carrier, said Wednesday it will resume flights to Hawaii next month after suspending the route for 19 months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Korean Air made the decision to preemptively prepare for the post-pandemic travel demand as the government plans to adopt a "Living with COVID-19" scheme, under which COVID-19 is treated as an infectious respiratory disease like the seasonal influenza, with eased distancing being implemented.The national flag carrier will resume three flights a week on the Incheon-Honolulu route Nov. 3, the company said in a statement.Inbound passengers are exempt from a mandatory 10-day quarantine in Hawaii if they submit documents that prove they tested negative for COVID-19. Smaller rival Asiana Airlines Inc., however, said it does not have a plan to resume flights to the U.S. Pacific island. (Yonhap

Oct 20, 2021
Korean Air to resume flights to Hawaii next month
Travel & Food

Colorful art projects pep up Joseon-era royal palace

A visitor wearing a face mask to help curb the spread of the coronavirus holds her smartphone as she walks through the Royal Culture Festival at the Gyeongbok Palace in Seoul, Oct. 19. AP-YonhapOn a sunny autumn afternoon, hundreds of traditional Korean lanterns with silk shades of all different colors fluttered gently in the breeze at a courtyard of the Gyeongbok Palace in central Seoul.Visitors wearing masks to prevent the spread of the coronavirus busily took photos of themselves against the backdrop of a tunnel made up of about 1,500 lanterns with silk shades from Jinju, 434 kilometers south of Seoul.The 28-meter tunnel was among the art projects featured in an outdoor exhibition underway at the main palace of the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910).The exhibition, titled "Daedongyejido," opened Saturday as part of the Royal Culture Festival 2021, co-hosted by the Cultural Heritage Administration and the Korea Cultural Heritage Foundation. The title is a compound of "Daedongyeojido," a famous map from the Joseon era, and the word "ye," meaning art.A visitor wearing a face mask to help cur

Oct 20, 2021
Colorful art projects pep up Joseon-era royal palace
Travel & Food

Luxury hotels transformed into cultural venues

Paradise City presents the audiovisual media art exhibition, "INSCAPE ― Voyage to Hidden Landscape," by Herman Kolgen, until Feb. 6. Courtesy of Paradise City By Jun Ji-hyeLuxury hotels have released a variety of unique programs and packages designed to provide guests with chances to enjoy culture and art. They are offering large-scale media art exhibitions and in-room operas, and even a library filled with a variety of books, in response to growing demand from guests and visitors for richer cultural experiences during their stay. The integrated resort complex Paradise City is showcasing a grand cinematic audiovisual media art exhibition, “INSCAPE ― Voyage to Hidden Landscape” by Herman Kolgen, a Canadian artist renowned for his multifaceted multimedia works.The exhibition is being held until Feb. 6 in five of the resort's major venues, including Paradise Art Space, and shows eight of the artist's works, including a new work that is being exhibited for the first tim

Oct 20, 2021By Jun Ji-hye
Luxury hotels transformed into cultural venues
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 20, 2021

Oct 19, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 20, 2021
Arts & Theater

Groundbreaking early-modern Russian avant-garde art to be unveiled in Seoul

“Improvisation” (1913) by Wassily Kandinsky / Courtesy of the Primorye State Art GalleryBy Park Han-solLike many revolutionary art movements, Russian avant-garde faced numerous dynamic historical events during its early modern era, which led to its ups and downs. It first emerged in the 1890s ― born out of a thirst for artistic innovation and liberation from old dogmas ― and reached its height both in creative output and popularity during the early 20th century, marked by the fall of the Russian Empire and the subsequent rise of the Soviet Union.Its heyday was cut short, however, when the Stalin regime decided to label the movement as “bourgeois and elitist” in the mid-1930s, decreeing socialist realism as the sole state-sanctioned artistic style.It wasn't until the mid-1990s, following the collapse of the Soviet Union, that this pioneering art genre, many of which works had been gathering dust for decades in the storage vaults of various regional museums, were brought into the global spotlight once again.“Mowers” (1911) by Natalia Sergeevna Goncha

Oct 19, 2021By Park Han-sol
Groundbreaking early-modern Russian avant-garde art to be unveiled in Seoul
Travel & Food

Local gov'ts moving to revitalize regional tourism for 'Living with COVID-19'

Hikers walk along Route 20 of Jeju Island's Olle Trail, in this photo taken on Oct. 23 last year when the downsized Jeju Olle Walking Festival kicked off. This year, Jeju Island will hold the event from this Friday to Nov. 16, aiming to revitalize tourism on the island. YonhapSouth Chungcheong Province aims to attract 100,000 Chinese tourists next yearBy Jun Ji-hyeLocal governments are moving fast to revitalize regional tourism and economies that have become stagnant amid the prolonged COVID-19, in line with the government's move to shift to a “Living with COVID-19” phase early next month.Under the policy shift, the government is set to ease social distancing measures, and health authorities plan to focus more on managing critically ill patients rather than all virus cases, as the nation's vaccination program has been gaining speed. This move is in preparation for returning to normal life in phases.The Seoul Metropolitan Government and the Seoul Tourism Organization said Monday that they will distribute 70,000 passes that provide discounts of up to more than 50 percent at

Oct 18, 2021By Jun Ji-hye
Local gov'ts moving to revitalize regional tourism for 'Living with COVID-19'
  • 'Squid Game' draws attention to Jeju Island
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